Brady Corbet, AI and Felicity
The Brutalist” director Brady Corbet addresses the backlash caused by the revelation that AI was used in parts of the film's creation.
Brady Corbet responds to 'The Brutalist' AI controversy in a statement clarifying it was only used for Hungarian dialogue editing.
"The Brutalist" is a nearly four-hour historical drama starring Adrien Brody as celebrated architect László Tóth. Here's what's real in the new movie.
Adrien Brody stars in Brady Corbet’s epic drama about a brilliant architect from Budapest hired by a dangerous capitalist played by Guy Pearce
Adrien Brody plays a Brutalist architect in post-war America in Brady Corbet's weighty drama. Read the Empire review.
Brady Corbet's 3 1/2-hour, drama, including intermission, won the Golden Globe for best drama and deserves to be seen on the big screen
To tell his story, Corbet dusted off VistaVision, a cinematic format developed 70 years ago that yields a richer, more luxurious image. It was a technique embraced by filmmakers like the late Stanley Kubrick, but it hasn’t been seen in North American theatres in over 60 years.
A24 The Brady Corbet-directed awards contender The Brutalist is causing a stir after the film’s editor, Dávid Jancsó, revealed artificial intelligence was used to enhance the performances of the film’s stars,
Jancsó, a native Hungarian speaker himself, said that he used the AI-powered Ukrainian voice synthesizer software Respeecher to mix his own voice into the dialogue articulated by
Adrien Brody and "The Brutalist" filmmakers are receiving backlash online for enhancing the actor's accent and the movie's architecture with AI.
A display of superb set pieces, impeccable directing and Oscar worthy performances, Brady Corbet’s new film ‘The Brutalist’ towers as 2024’s magnum cinematic opus.